What is sample size?
So what is sampling, and why does sample size matter?
When you survey a large population of respondents, you’re interested in the entire group, but it’s not realistically possible to get answers or results from absolutely everyone. So you take a random sample of individuals which represents the population as a whole.
The size of the sample is very important for getting accurate, statistically significant results and running your study successfully.
- If your sample is too small, you may include a disproportionate number of individuals which are outliers and anomalies. These skew the results and you don’t get a fair picture of the whole population.
- If the sample is too big, the whole study becomes complex, expensive and time-consuming to run, and although the results are more accurate, the benefits don’t outweigh the costs.
If you’ve already worked out your variables you can get to the right sample size quickly with the online sample size calculator below:
If you want to start from scratch in determining the right sample size for your market research, let us walk you through the steps.
Learn how to determine sample size
To choose the correct sample size, you need to consider a few different factors that affect your research, and gain a basic understanding of the statistics involved. You’ll then be able to use a sample size formula to bring everything together and sample confidently, knowing that there is a high probability that your survey is statistically accurate.
The steps that follow are suitable for finding a sample size for continuous data – i.e. data that is counted numerically. It doesn’t apply to categorical data – i.e. put into categories like green, blue, male, female etc.
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Stage 1: Consider your sample size variables
Before you can calculate a sample size, you need to determine a few things about the target population and the level of accuracy you need:
1. Population size
How many people are you talking about in total? To find this out, you need to be clear about who does and doesn’t fit into your group. For example, if you want to know about dog owners, you’ll include everyone who has at some point owned at least one dog. (You may include or exclude those who owned a dog in the past, depending on your research goals.) Don’t worry if you’re unable to calculate the exact number. It’s common to have an unknown number or an estimated range.
2. Margin of error (confidence interval)
Errors are inevitable – the question is how much error you’ll allow. The margin of error, AKA confidence interval, is expressed in terms of mean numbers. You can set how much difference you’ll allow between the mean number of your sample and the mean number of your population. If you’ve ever seen a political poll on the news, you’ve seen a confidence interval and how it’s expressed. It will look something like this: “68% of voters said yes to Proposition Z, with a margin of error of +/- 5%.”
3. Confidence level
This is a separate step to the similarly-named confidence interval in step 2. It deals with how confident you want to be that the actual mean falls within your margin of error. The most common confidence intervals are 90% confident, 95% confident, and 99% confident.
4. Standard deviation
This step asks you to estimate how much the responses you receive will vary from each other and from the mean number. A low standard deviation means that all the values will be clustered around the mean number, whereas a high standard deviation means they are spread out across a much wider range with very small and very large outlying figures. Since you haven’t yet run your survey, a safe choice is a standard deviation of .5 which will help make sure your sample size is large enough.
Stage 2: Calculate sample size
Now that you’ve got answers for steps 1 – 4, you’re ready to calculate the sample size you need. This can be done using the online sample size calculator above or with paper and pencil.
5. Find your Z-score
Next, you need to turn your confidence level into a Z-score. Here are the Z-scores for the most common confidence levels:
- 90% – Z Score = 1.645
- 95% – Z Score = 1.96
- 99% – Z Score = 2.576
If you chose a different confidence level, use our Z-score table to find your score.
6. Use the sample size formula
Plug in your Z-score, standard of deviation, and confidence interval into the sample size calculator or use this sample size formula to work it out yourself:
This equation is for an unknown population size or a very large population size. If your population is smaller and known, just use the sample size calculator above, or find it here.
What does that look like in practice?
Here’s a worked example, assuming you chose a 95% confidence level, .5 standard deviation, and a margin of error (confidence interval) of +/- 5%.
((1.96)2 x .5(.5)) / (.05)2
(3.8416 x .25) / .0025
.9604 / .0025
384.16
385 respondents are needed
Voila! You’ve just determined your sample size.
Troubleshooting your sample size results
If the sample size is too big to manage, you can adjust the results by either
- decreasing your confidence level
- increasing your margin of error
This will increase the chance for error in your sampling, but it can greatly decrease the number of responses you need.
Continue the journey with our Guide to Market Research